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Media effects

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Title: Media effects


1
Media effects
2
Laswells Model of Mass Communication
  • Who
  • Says What
  • In Which Channel
  • To Whom
  • With What Effect

3
Effects Theories
  • Walter Lippmann Public Opinion (1922)
  • We see the world as "pictures in our heads"
  • Media shape perception of things we have not
    experienced personally

4
Powerful Effects Theory
  • Media have immediate, direct influence
  • Assumes people are passive and absorb media
    content uncritically unconditionally
  • Hypodermic Needle model
  • Magic Bullet model

5
Minimalist Effects
  • Paul Lazarsfeld Erie County study (1940)
  • Mass media had hardly any direct effect
  • Personal contact more important than media
    contact
  • Media effects mostly indirect

6
Two-step Flow model
  • Media affect individuals through opinion leaders
  • Opinion leaders are those who influence others
  • Clergy, teachers, neighborhood leaders, etc.

7
Status Conferral
  • Media coverage can create prominence for issues
    people
  • Agenda Setting
  • Maxwell McCombs Don Shaw
  • Media tell people what to think about but not
    what to think

8
Media can
  • Create awareness
  • Establish priorities
  • Perpetuate issues
  • Intramedia effect as well

9
Narcoticizing dysfunction
  • Media do not energize people into taking action
  • Media lull people into passivity by overwhelming
    them with information
  • People deceive selves into believing theyre
    involved when theyre actually only informed

10
Cumulative Effects Theory
  • Media influence is gradual over time
  • Effect is often powerful
  • Spiral of Silence (Noelle-Neumann)
  • Vocal majority intimidates others into silence

11
Focus on the audience
  • 1940s challenge to audience passivity

12
Uses Gratifications
  • People choose media that meet their needs
    interests
  • Needs such as
  • Surveillance
  • Diversion
  • Socialization

13
Surveillance
  • Media provide info about whats going on
  • Both news entertainment

14
Diversion
  • Media as entertainment
  • Stimulate
  • Relax
  • Release

15
Socialization
  • Mass media can help initiate people into society
  • And help them fit in
  • Demonstrate dominant behaviors and norms
  • Observational learning

16
Role modeling
  • Imitative behavior
  • Impact can be negative or positive ("prosocial)

17
Socialization via eavesdropping
  • Children learn about adult topics by seeing them
    depicted in media

18
  • Parasocial interaction
  • False sense of participating in dialogue
  • Communication is actually one-way

19
Consistency theory
  • Individuals exercise control over medias effects
    on them
  • People choose media messages consistent with
    their existing views values
  • Selective
  • Exposure
  • Perception
  • Retention Recall

20
Selective Exposure
  • People choose some media messages over others
  • People ignore messages that contradict their
    beliefs

21
Selective Perception
  • People tend to hear what they want or expect to
    hear

22
Selective retention recall
  • People retain recollect some media messages and
    not others

23
  • Bottom line
  • Individuals have a large degree of control over
    how the mass media affect them

24
War of the Worlds Revisited
  • Why did the Orson Welles broadcast have such a
    powerful effect on its audience?
  • EarthStation1.com's Radio Sounds Showcase The
    1938 "War of the Worlds" Radio Broadcast Wavs

25
  • Reverence for radio as a reliable medium
  • Predisposition to expect bad news
  • Selective perception
  • Gullibility fueled by awe of science
  • WWI memories gas warfare
  • Failure of common sense

26
Determining Causality
  • Correlation means that 2 or more variables
    coexist
  • Causality means that one variable causes another
  • Beware of bad science (studies purporting
    causality)
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